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Biophysics represents perhaps one of the best examples of
interdisciplinary research areas, where concepts and methods from
disciplines such as physics, biology, b- chemistry, colloid
chemistry, and physiology are integrated. It is by no means a new
?eld of study and has actually been around, initially as
quantitative physiology and partly as colloid science, for over a
hundred years. For a long time, biophysics has been taught and
practiced as a research discipline mostly in medical schools and
life sciences departments, and excellent biophysics textbooks have
been published that are targeted at a biologically literate
audience. With a few exceptions, it is only relatively recently
that biophysics has started to be recognized as a physical science
and integrated into physics departments' curr- ula, sometimes under
the new name of biological physics. In this period of cryst-
lization and possible rede?nition of biophysics, there still exists
some uncertainty as to what biophysics might actually represent. A
particular tendency among phy- cists is to associate biophysics
research with the development of powerful new te- niques that
should eventually be used not by physicists to study physical
processes in living matter, but by biologists in their biological
investigations. There is value in that judgment, and excellent
books have been published that introduce the int- ested reader to
the use of physical principles for the development of new methods
of investigation in life sciences.
Biophysics represents perhaps one of the best examples of
interdisciplinary research areas, where concepts and methods from
disciplines such as physics, biology, b- chemistry, colloid
chemistry, and physiology are integrated. It is by no means a new
?eld of study and has actually been around, initially as
quantitative physiology and partly as colloid science, for over a
hundred years. For a long time, biophysics has been taught and
practiced as a research discipline mostly in medical schools and
life sciences departments, and excellent biophysics textbooks have
been published that are targeted at a biologically literate
audience. With a few exceptions, it is only relatively recently
that biophysics has started to be recognized as a physical science
and integrated into physics departments' curr- ula, sometimes under
the new name of biological physics. In this period of cryst-
lization and possible rede?nition of biophysics, there still exists
some uncertainty as to what biophysics might actually represent. A
particular tendency among phy- cists is to associate biophysics
research with the development of powerful new te- niques that
should eventually be used not by physicists to study physical
processes in living matter, but by biologists in their biological
investigations. There is value in that judgment, and excellent
books have been published that introduce the int- ested reader to
the use of physical principles for the development of new methods
of investigation in life sciences.
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